
Landscape
William Henry Holmes·1889
Historical Context
Landscape (1889) by William Henry Holmes, now in the collection of Smithsonian American Art Museum, represents the artist's engagement with landscape as a vehicle for exploring the relationship between direct observation and pictorial structure, light, and atmosphere. William Henry Holmes had a uniquely dual career as both a significant American artist and a pioneer of American anthropology and geology. As a member of the U.S. Geological Survey, he documented the landscapes of the Rocky Mountains, the Grand Canyon, and the Yosemite Valley with both scientific accuracy and genuine painterly skill.
Technical Analysis
Holmes combined scientific precision with aesthetic sensibility in his landscape work, reflecting his dual career as artist and geologist. His palette captures the specific chromatic qualities of American geological formations — the red-orange of canyon sandstone.







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